Tuesday, April 8, 2008

29 MILES OF STATE ROADS TO BE REPAVED

PennDOT has launched a $6 million project this week to repair and resurface 29 miles of state roads in Delaware County.
Crews will close travel lanes on Baltimore Pike between Route 420 (Woodland Avenue) in Springfield and Burmont Road near the Clifton Heights/Lansdowne boundary from 8 a.m.-3 p.m. for prep work and 7 p.m.-5 a.m. for milling.
Work in this area is expected to last three weeks, PennDOT said. Work on the overall project is expected to be completed by Nov. 25.
The additional roads to be repaired and resurfaced under this contract with James J. Anderson Construction Co. Inc. are:
BULLET Springfield Road between Baltimore Avenue and Route 1 (State Road) in Clifton Heights, Upper Darby, Springfield and Marple.
BULLET Baltimore Pike between the Chester County line and Brinton Lake Road in Chadds Ford and Concord.
BULLET Brinton Lake Road between Baltimore Pike and Dilworthtown Road in Concord and Thornbury.
BULLET Sweetwater Road between Creek Road and Valley Road in Valley Township.
BULLET College Avenue between Cooperstown Road and the Montgomery County line in Haverford.
BULLET Cooperstown Road between College Avenue and Stockton Road in Haverford.
BULLET U.S. Route 202 (Wilmington Pike) between the Delaware state line and Smithbridge Road in Bethel and Concord.
BULLET Glen Riddle Road/Parkmount Road between Lenni Road and Middletown Road in Middletown.
BULLET Fourth/Ninth streets between Hewes Avenue and Ridley Creek in Marcus Hook, Trainer and Chester.
BULLET Upland Avenue between Edgmont Avenue and Upland Avenue in Upland and Chester.
BULLET Burmont Road between Garrett Road and State Road in Upper Darby.
The $6,097,076 project is financed with 100 percent state funds.
-- JOHN M. ROMAN

1 Comments:

Blogger JRC BITES said...

The New York Stock Exchange is giving JRC the boot!

NEW YORK (AP) -- NYSE Regulation Inc. said Friday shares of publisher Journal Register Co. do not meet the Big Board's continued listing standards, and it will suspend trading of the stock before April 16.
Journal Register shares closed Friday at 26 cents and have closed below $1 over 30 consecutive trading days, violating one of the exchange's continued listing criteria.

NYSE Regulation also said the "abnormally low" price of Journal Register's stock makes it "appropriate" to suspend the stock before giving the company time to bring shares within compliance.

The Yardley, Pa., publisher has a market capitalization of roughly $11 million based on Friday's closing price. The stock has traded between 16 cents and $6.48 over the past 52 weeks.

Journal Register, which publishes daily newspapers and non-daily publications, said earlier in the week it hired Lazard Freres as its financial adviser to help it evaluate strategic options.

April 12, 2008 4:41 AM 

Post a Comment

<< Home